The Debt: Painting exhibition by Spyridon Mouratidis opens in Sydney

·

An exhibition of watercolour artworks by Dr Spyridon Mouratidis has gone on display at the N. Smith Gallery in the Sydney suburb of Paddington.

One look at the exhibition takes visitors back to the period of the Asia Minor Catastrophe, as Dr Mouratidis’ brush strokes capture the trauma of refugees who were torn from their homes at the time and lost all their personal belongings.

The exhibition is part of this year’s Greek Festival of Sydney and is being proudly supported by the Hellenic Lyceum of Sydney.

At the official opening of the exhibition, a number of speeches were given by the Consul General of Greece in Sydney, Ioannis Mallikourtis; the President of the Greek Orthodox Community of NSW (GOCNSW), Harry Danalis; the Chair of the Greek Festival of Sydney, Nia Karteris; and the President of the Hellenic Lyceum of Sydney, Liana Vertzayias; and the artist himself, Dr Mouratidis.

In her speech, Ms Vertzayias said it was a pleasure to be partnering with the Greek Festival of Sydney for the exhibition. Dr Mouratidis then took to the podium and briefly described some of the water colour artworks which are on display.

“I hope that, after seeing my paintings, I will have eventually succeeded in directing your thoughts for a while to all those people who lost their lives in the Asia Minor Catastrophe, as well as to those who survived and with their wounds open, they have managed to stand on their feet and build a new life in Greece,” the artist said.

“If so, I will have achieved my objective; to hold a memorial service here with you, as a debt repayment towards all those people.”

The event concluded with guests mingling amongst themselves and remarking on the tangible beauty of the artworks.

Dr Mouratidis will be giving a lecture about ‘The Debt’ exhibition on Tuesday, March 7 at the The Gallery Beta Bar in Sydney at 6.30pm.

Advertisement

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Advertisement

Latest News

Historical novel ‘Bound to Two Homelands’ launched in Melbourne and Canberra

Associate Professor Con Aroney's historical novel 'Bound to Two Homelands' launched in Melbourne and Canberra.

Giannis Antetokounmpo co-produces film set on Mykonos island

The Greek basketball superstar, already known for his ventures in energy drinks, wineries, is now adding cinema to his business repertoire.

Mystery of the 300 million euro home listed for sale near the Acropolis

A single-family home on Dionysiou Aeropagitou street, directly across from the Acropolis had been listed setting a new record.

The Economist predicts return of Parthenon Marbles to Greece by 2025

The long-standing dispute over the Parthenon sculptures, also known as thee Elgin Marbles, may see significant progress.

Meet the Greeks among Australia’s top Green Energy players

A list of the 100 Top Green Energy Players in Australia has been released, and among the names are at least two Greek Australians.

You May Also Like

Traditional Greek Recipes: Village Bread (Horiatiko Psomi)

A super easy Greek village bread recipe (Horiatiko Psomi) that will amaze you!

Greece surpasses COVID-19 milestone after one million vaccinations administered to public

A "wall of immunity" is being built according to Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis who announced yesterday that Greece has surpassed the one million mark in Covid-19 vaccinations.

Dr Maria Delivoria-Papadopoulos: ‘Mother of neonatology’ dies in US

Hailed as the “mother of neonatology,” Maria Delivoria-Papadopoulos is credited with saving thousands of infants’ and children’s lives.